Tag: Amitabh Bachchan

  • 3D format of Sholay to release on 15 August

    3D format of Sholay to release on 15 August

    MUMBAI: The year 2012 will mark the return of two super hit films that will be re-released in 3D.

    The first to hit the screen is James Cameron’s disaster film Titanic that releases in the 3D format on 5 April. Following it on 15 August will see the release of the 3D version of G P Sippy‘s Sholay. The film will also be released in the 2D format.

    Confirming the film‘s re-release, Shaan Uttam Singh, the grandson of GP Sippy, said: “We are coming up with the 3D version of Sholay. The project is almost complete and will release on 15 August. The movie is a classic and people will love to watch it with the technological augmentation.”

    Jayanti Lal Gada, CMD of Pen India, the production house behind the making of the 3D version of the film, averred: “We are planning to release the movie on 15 August because it was released on the same day in 1975. The idea of the 3D version came from copyright owners of the movie.

    I believe it is the best movie to augment with special effects. After 20 years of its release when the movie was first screened on DD National, it registered a TRP (target rating point) of 65. That is the highest TRP of any movie showcased on Indian television. We hope people will like its 3D form as well.”

    Talking about the cost of the conversion, Gada said that while the cost of transferring the original format to 2D cost Rs 20 million, the cost of 3D conversion cost him Rs 250 million.

    The film stars Amitabh Bachchan, Jaya Bachchan, Dharmendra and Hema Malini.

  • Sequel of Aankhen in offing

    Sequel of Aankhen in offing

    MUMBAI: Producer Gaurang Doshi is well on way to make a sequel of his 2002 film Aankhen that starred Amitabh Bachchan, Akshay Kumar, Arjun Rampal, Paresh Rawal and Sushmita Sen in lead roles. But this time besides Bachchan, the entire cast is set to change.

    Talking about the fresh star cast, Doshi has said, “There will be a new cast except for Amitabh Bachchan. We are on the verge of finalising things and would make an announcement soon.”

    Though the original was directed by Vipul Shah, the second installment will be helmed by a new director. “We have been working on this idea of a sequel since quite some time. The first part of the film had two endings — one for the Indian market and the other for the overseas audience. The three protagonists in the film would remain blind,” averred Doshi, while revealing his plans.

    The sequel that will be shot in India, Canada and England would go on floors soon and is expected to release next year.

  • cdubs for Bheeshma Pitamah

    cdubs for Bheeshma Pitamah

    MUMBAI: Jayantilal Gada‘s PEN India has taken the services of Amitabh Bachchan to lend his voice and face of Bheeshma Pitamah in its animation film Mahabharat. This is for the first time that the characters of the epic will resemble the stars who dub for them respectively.

    PEN claims that the budget of the movie is Rs 500 million.

    Talking about Bachchan lending his voice to his dream project, producer Gada said, “Amitabh Bachchan has lent his voice to the role of Bheeshma Pitamah in our animated film Mahabharat. He finished the entire recording in just one hour. He has such a command over the language that he even corrected minor grammatical mistakes in the dialogues.”

    Besides, the film has been dubbed by 15 other actors involved with the project. Each character has been made to look like the actor dubbing for it.

    Though it has been revealed that Sunny Deol has recorded for the role of Bheem, the other names involved with the project have been kept under wraps.

    It is interesting to note that Bachchan‘s Jodi Tor Dak Sune Keo Naa Ashe is the centre of attraction of PEN India and Viacom 18 Motion Pictures‘ joint venture Kahaani.

  • Ram Gopal Varma to make ‘The Businessman’ in Hindi

    Ram Gopal Varma to make ‘The Businessman’ in Hindi

    MUMBAI: The Hindi remake of the Telugu hit, The Businessman, will be produced and directed by Ram Gopal Varma.

    The project is now being given a Hindi touch and is being planned on a far bigger scale than the original.

    The Businessman featured Mahesh Babu and was directed by Puri Jagannadh who had earlier directed the Amitabh Bachchan-starrer Buddha Hoga Tera Baap.

    “Ramu is producing the Hindi version of The Businessman and directing it too. Have already done whatever I could with plot and screenplay of The Businessman. Would be interesting to see what Ramu does to the story in Hindi,” said Jagannadh.

    In fact it was Puri who had asked Varma to take over the project that was accepted by the latter. The Businessman had turned out to be a Telugu blockbuster.

  • Film on Tagore’s life in offing

    Film on Tagore’s life in offing

    MUMBAI: Siddhant Cinevision has bought the rights of Sunil Gangopadhyay’s controversial novel Ranu O Bhanu based on Nobel Laureate Rabindranath Tagore’s life.


    The novel is one of the most controversial of recent times as it is said that Ranu O Ranu explores Tagore’s romantic relationship with his sister-in-law.


    Finding it rather interesting, producer Manish Goswami has decided to make a film based on it. The producer wants to keep everything rather hush-hush at the moment. But he has made his intention clear of casting Amitabh Bachchan in Tagore’s role.


    Selection of cast and crew is in progress.

  • Salman Khan tipped to replace Amitabh Bachchan

    Salman Khan tipped to replace Amitabh Bachchan

    MUMBAI: Amitabh Bachchan, who has played the narrator or sutradhar‘s role in many films, has excused himself from being one in the Hollywood film John Carter.

    Earlier, when the makers of the film approached the superstar for the sutradhar‘s role for the Hindi version, he decided to do the film.But the actor‘s current health condition has left him with no choice but to back out of the project.

    It is now being said that Salman Khan will now don the hat of the sutradhar for the film.

    However, Khan hasn‘t been able to seal the deal as he is currently in Cuba shooting for Yash Raj Film‘s Ek Tha Tiger.

  • Ekk Deewana Tha is a tedious romcom

    Ekk Deewana Tha is a tedious romcom

    MUMBAI: Ekk Deewana Tha is supposed to be, as is the need of the times, a feel good film about an obsessive young romance. Spanning two hours twenty minutes, its lead pair Prateik and Amy Jackson account for and are burdened with most of the footage. Fresh star cast love stories usually go down well with the audience, but they need to be backed by a taut script, strong villain and, mainly great musical score. Ekk Deewana Tha alas, has none of these to offer.









    Producer: Gautham Vasudev Menon, Reshma Ghatala, Venkat Somasundaram, Elred Kumar, Jayaraman.
    Director: Gautam Vasudev Menon.
    Cast: Prateik, Amy Jackson, Manu Rishi, Sachin Khedekar, Babu Antony, Ramesh Sippy (Guest App.).


    Prateik is a jobless engineer but his heart is in filmmaking. While their flat is under redevelopment his family stays as tenants at a Juhu bungalow. Amy Jackson is the daughter of the bungalow owner Babu Antony – an orthodox Malayalee Christian occupying the upper floor in the same bungalow. When Prateik sees Amy Jackson for the first time, he is besotted. For Amy too it is love at first sight but she won‘t say so and rest of the film consists of her saying ‘I love you, I love you not‘ to the hero. The girl‘s father is anti-cinema due to which his daughter has seen all of five films in her 23 years of life. So much so that even though Antony lives in the same lane as Amitabh Bachchan he has never heard of him because he does not watch films!


    Do you have to watch Hindi films to know who Amitabh Bachchan is? But this is the writer and director‘s idea of comedy. For the viewer this is the hint of what to expect as the film progresses. Actually the film unwinds but never really progresses.


    While Amy Jackon works in an IT firm, unemployed Prateik mostly whiles away his time visiting film studios and hanging around his cinematographer friend in the hope of getting a break. He may be unemployed and living on his father‘s handouts but that does not stop him from taking flights or fuelling his bike to stalk his love. What works against Prateik is that Amy‘s father is anti-love marriage. It doesn‘t help that Prateik is a Hindu, unemployed, a year younger to the girl and is seeking a career in films.


    Hence, when the father realises that his daughter has taken a fancy to this boy, he quickly packs bags to travel to Alleppy in Kerala, his native town and gets the girl married to an NRI. At this juncture, the film spends its one and only high point when the girl refuses to marry when the priest performing the ritual asks her as is the custom. For rest of the movie the girl continues with her yes and no to love even as they both sing dance around and even get drenched. The director seems to have lost sense of locations as scenes jump from one to another place. By this time the viewer has stopped caring any more.


    Suddenly Amy Jackson vanishes, reported to be married and gone abroad. But there she is visiting the ultimate symbol of love, the Taj Mahal, where the hero also happens to go to scout locations for his maiden film based on his very own love story. And no, she is not married. Love has won and they decide to marry instantly, her father and his views, who she respected throughout the previous 130 minutes of this arduous film, be damned.


    As the film opens, the boy‘s family is introduced as Maharashtrian Konkanstha Brahmin, but there hangs a huge portrait of Lord Shrinathiji on the wall, the deity of the Vaishnav sect. You know then that the director is not going to give much attention to details and just try to remake the film as it was in its Southern versions. The script is so loose it could easily have been compacted into a 25-minute TV episode. As the lead pair dominates most of the film the challenge proves too much for them. Pratiek‘s acting prowess, if any, is not evident anywhere. Amy Jackson looks pretty initially but that novelty soon wears off as her ability to express or emote is limited. Rest have little to contribute.


    Ekk Deewana Tha is a tedious romcom poor in content and execution.
     
    Sincere effort amid budget constraints









    Producer: DNA Movies, Redcandy Films.
    Director: Dilip Shankar.
    Cast: Archana Joglekar, Raghubir Yadav, Chetan Pandit, Ashok Samarth, Akhilendra Mishra, Ganesh Yadav, Shweta Tiwari, Jackie Shroff.


    The title suggests that Married 2 America should be some NRI story woven around America. The only relation the film and America have is that the couple is from America while the rest of it takes place in Darbhanga in Bihar. So the title may be grossly misleading.


    Archana Joglekar is settled with her architect husband in the US. Married for five years she seeks love and affection from her husband, Chetan Pandit, who is always immersed in his computer and a spread of blueprints, even late at night when she wishes him to be next to her. She realises that she is being taken for granted and neglected. Just when she is finished roaming around the picturesque lanes of her city with a rather depressing song playing in the background, she gets a call from her husband asking her to pack his bags as he has to travel to India by first flight. That is the last she hears from him save for a fax message informing her that he is in trouble and won‘t be in touch. Instead of sitting and worrying, Archana Joglekar decides to travel to Darbhanga in Bihar and check into the very hotel her husband had sent her the fax message from.


    She embarks on her own personal investigation to trace him. Chetan Pandit has come to Bihar because a massive dam his firm designed and built has broken down flooding many villages and killing hundreds. He is ready with his report for the failure of the gates when he is kidnapped by Jackie Shroff, a supposedly reformed dacoit. It would seem the failure of the dam has been deliberately engineered by the local Chief Minister and his cronies to claim the Rs 20 billion largesse from the federal government.


    As Archana Joglekar sets out to investigate along with Raghubir Yadav, a local taxi driver, an attempt is made on her life which she survives but ends up in police chowky manned by a brutal and corrupt policeman. Help comes in the form of Ashok Samarth, a local warlord who shelters her from threats. But the kind host soon turns into a foe when he learns that she is the wife of the man who designed the dam which killed his wife and children, among others. The CM wants both the husband and wife killed; Jackie Shroff wants to trade them for some millions while Samarth also wants his revenge.


    The end, as expected, exposes the scam. The husband married to his American way of life, where work comes to him before family, learns to value his wife.


    The film is shot on real locations in Bihar but budget constraints show on the making as well as inability to get known faces to star in the film. Though the direction is sincere, this handicap tells. Some scenes are unnecessarily prolonged and can be snipped for better effect. Music is not of the popular kind, used mostly to express state of mind of the lead actor Archana Joglekar who looks past her prime. Her age shows. Among others, Ashok Samarth and Raghubir Yadav are effective while Jackie Shroff, Akhilendra Mishra and Chetan Pandit are okay.

  • Agneepath remake fails to impress

    Agneepath remake fails to impress

    MUMBAI: What would justify remaking a commercial flop, Agneepath, earlier made with the reigning star of that era, Amitabh Bachchan? It seems the producers felt disappointed with the audience verdict and eventually decided to remake the film and prove the audience wrong! No business involving crores is worth doing on emotional grounds, least of all filmmaking.

     

     

    Producer: Hiroo Yash Johar, KaranJohar.
    Director: Karan Malhotra.
    Cast: Hrithik Roshan, Sanjay Dutt, Rishi Kapoor, Priyanka Chopra, Om Puri, Zarina Wahab,

     

    The plot is the same old: set in Mandwa village, off Mumbai‘s coast, with its honest teacher, Dinanath Chavan and the usurper, Kancha Cheena. Sanjay Dutt is Kancha Cheena here, with a devilish getup just so that an impression is made of his sinister character. He frames the noble school teacher in a child molestation case leading to his public lynching from a village tree.

    Having established the villain and his macabre ways, the process to build the angry young hero begins. It is done easily enough as Hrithik Roshan commits his first crime even before reaching teens, that of shooting a cop.

    However, it is the other villain, introduced in the form of Rishi Kapoor, who remains sketchy. Introduced as the one in flesh trade auctioning young girls to shady and filthy-looking buyers, suddenly he is a drug lord and ‘owns‘ Mumbai.

    Hrithik Roshan has a goal which he never discloses but the viewer somehow knows. His ultimate aim is to kill Sanjay Dutt and free the locals of Mandwa from his slavery. Therefore, once introduced, Sanjay Dutt goes invisible till post-interval when he will be needed to close the story he started by killing the village teacher.

    The romantic link sans any romance on screen is provided by Priyanka Chopra who, like all angry young heroes‘ beaus, has to hang around in the background till needed for a song number or an emotional scene, both of which are scant and flat whenever attempted. There is the mandatory honest cop, Om Puri, who knows everything wrong that is happening around him but never gets the go ahead to do anything.

    The story demands that the hero do it, not the police. Rishi Kapoor has refused to do business with Sanjay Dutt and bad blood exists between the two. Hrithik Roshan joins Rishi Kapoor with the aim of playing one against the other, which will lead him to Sanjay Dutt. Hrithik starts his campaign by betraying Rishi Kapoor, killing his son and heir and later Rishi Kapoor when the drug lord finds out about the betrayal. What happens hereafter is that the film, already patchy and dull, goes haywire.

    Eventually, Hrithik invites himself to Mandwa to confront Sanjay Dutt, gets slashed by a sword four times. He is bashed up for most of the last few reels as he is led to the village tree to be lynched like his father when, like a bolt from the blue, he rises again. He fells Sanjay Dutt with a couple of blows and then hangs him from the same tree as his father.

    The close-up expressions of Sanjay Dutt while Hrithik prepares to hang him seem to suggest, “I could have got up 10 times in so much time and bashed you up so better finish fast whatever it is you have to do!”

    Agneepath is a huge comedown on its original which itself was no great shakes; a vengeance story without a solid cause does not work, especially if the grudge is worth nursing for 15 years and translates to nearly three hours of screen time. The director seems to emulate many 80‘s directors of mass movies. His prime inspiration seems to be Mukul Anand, the director of the first Agneepath. Here, director Karan Malhotra also seems very fond of filling up the screen with crowds, may it be a fight scene or a song.

    Songs are no help in the film and the choreography is bad; the much touted item number by Katrina Kaif, Chikni Chameli, falls flat. And there is no indication of the relevance of the Ganpati procession sequence and song to the story. The film lacks finesse with everything about it being drab. As for actors, Hrithik Roshan has been grossly misused. He has to look sullen all the time and talk less: the famous Rober Mitchum look which Sunny Deol did convincingly.

    Sanjay Dutt only emerges as a caricature, carrying his one evil look throughout the movie. Rishi Kapoor is the only one who stands out despite the limitations of his role. Priyanka Chopra, Zarina Wahab, Om Puri and others are incidental to the happenings. A massive session of editing could have helped to some extent.

    Agneepath the remake offers nothing worth liking it for and is grossly less watchable over its original.

  • Funeral of Anthony Gonsalves on Saturday

    Funeral of Anthony Gonsalves on Saturday

    MUMBAI: The burial ceremony of legendary music arranger and composer Anthony Gonsalves who passed away on Wednesday will be held in Goa after his son Kiran arrives from the US. Gonsalves is survived by wife Melita, daughter Laxmi and a son.

    The 84-year-old, who was the inspiration behind the track My Name Is Anthony Gonsalves from the hit film Amar Akbar Anthony, was admitted to Goa Medical College on account of pneumonia on Sunday.

    Having started off as an obscure violinist with renowned music composer Naushad‘s group in 1943, Gonsalves moved on to work with biggies like Anil Biswas, Gulam Haidar, Shyam Sundar, Sachin Dev Burman, R D Burman and Laxmikant Pyarelal among others.

    Tweeted Amitabh Bachchan on Gonsalves’ demise, "Anthony Gonsalves…passes away….talented musician with LP and on his name my character name for Anthony was put..prayers."

    He is remembered for his musical arrangements in Mahal, Naya Daur, Dillagi and Pyaasa to name a few films. The noted arranger is also credited with founding an Indian symphony orchestra featuring Lata Mangeshkar and Manna Dey as soloists.

    It may be recalled that a 58-minute film was screened at the International Film Festival of India (IFFI) in his honour in 2010.
     

  • Nokia, Tata remain India’s most trusted brands; Anna Hazare is top personality

    Nokia, Tata remain India’s most trusted brands; Anna Hazare is top personality

    BANGALORE: Nokia and Tata have retained their position as the top two trusted brands in India this year, according to a recent brand study.

    Anna Hazare has surged, gaining the nation’s trust ahead of Sachin Tendulkar, Salman Khan, Amitabh Bachchan and Aamir Khan who feature in that order.

    According to the second edition of Brand Trust Report (BTR) released by The Comniscient Group’s Trust Research Advisory (TRA), Sony has slipped two positions to become the fifth most trusted brand, while LG and Samsung have moved up to the third and fourth positions.

    The BTR India Report 2012 lists India’s 1000 most trusted brands. There are 22 personalities listed in BTR.

    Reliance has slipped from its number six position last year to No.10, while Bajaj at No.7 has eased out Titan from the top 10 positions. LIC and Airtel have retained their last year’s positions of eighth and ninth ranks respectively.

    TRA CEO N Chandramouli said, “In life, without trust, there is nothing. Each time a human engages with anything, the basis for all decisions is trust. Be it brands, other humans, or just ideas, one will react to them on the basis of the trust it generates. Last year was tumultuous for several brands, but those which focused on trust, have gained market-share, revenues and profits. On the other hand, the brands which have focused only on the latter, have invariably lost both. Focus on building trust and all else will follow automatically.”

    Most Trusted leaders in some other categories are Armani in Branded Fashion, DLF in Construction, NIIT in Education, ONGC in Energy, PVR in Entertainment, Pepsi in F&B, Dabur in Healthcare, Taj Hotels in Hospitality, Google in Internet, ACC in Manufacturing, Thomas Cook in Services, Being Human in Social Sector, Hewlett Packard in Technology, and Air India in Airlines.

    The BTR is an attempt to understand and simplify concepts related to Brand Trust – it tries to help decipher, analyse and measure trust as the basis for all human-based engagements and interactions.

    The research has been carried out using TRA’s proprietary Trust Matrix comprising 61 different ingredients or components of trust. The research has been conducted with 2,718 ‘influencer’ respondents from 15 cities in India and is based on more than two million data points from 12,000 hours of research, said TRA.